Employer Payroll Tax Obligations: What Every Business Owner Needs to Know
A complete 2026 breakdown of FICA, FUTA, SUTA, California’s four-tax system, deposit schedules, filing deadlines, and the penalties that catch employers off guard.
The moment you hire your first employee, the IRS and your state government become silent business partners. They don’t show up to work, they don’t contribute capital, and they certainly don’t help on the difficult days — but they are entitled to their share of every payroll you run, and they expect it delivered on time, in the right form, through the right channel.
Understanding your employer payroll tax obligations is not optional, and it’s not something you can delegate to payroll software and forget about. It is a set of specific, recurring legal duties that affect your cash flow, your liability exposure, and in some cases your personal finances — regardless of your business structure.
This guide walks through every major payroll tax obligation facing U.S. employers: the 2026 rates and wage bases, deposit and filing deadlines, what happens when something goes wrong, and — for California employers — the additional layer of state taxes that makes payroll one of the most compliance-intensive obligations in the country.
The Big Picture: What Employers Actually Owe
Before diving into the details, it helps to understand the three categories. Employer payroll tax obligations fall into distinct buckets:
Shared With Employees
Under FICA, both employer and employee contribute to Social Security and Medicare. You withhold the employee’s share and match it dollar for dollar from company funds.
Employer-Only Taxes
FUTA and most SUTA taxes are your obligation entirely. Nothing is withheld from employee paychecks — these come directly from your business.
Collected & Remitted
Federal and state income tax withholding is the employee’s money, held in trust. Your job is to calculate the right amount and pass it to the appropriate agencies on schedule.
Failure to remit trust fund taxes — even temporarily — is treated extremely seriously by the IRS and can result in personal liability. More on that below.
FICA: Social Security and Medicare Taxes
FICA is the largest payroll tax most employers deal with, and it is the one most directly tied to employee wages on every payroll run.
How FICA Works
For 2026, the Social Security tax rate is 6.2% for the employer and 6.2% for the employee, applied to wages up to the Social Security wage base of $184,500 — an increase from $176,100 in 2025. Once an employee’s cumulative wages exceed $184,500 for the year, Social Security tax stops for both parties.
Medicare tax is simpler: 1.45% for both employer and employee, on all wages with no cap. No ceiling, no phase-out.
One important wrinkle: employees whose wages exceed $200,000 in a calendar year are subject to an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax on amounts above that threshold. This is an employee-only obligation — you don’t match it — but you are required to withhold it. Once any single employee’s wages reach $200,000, begin withholding the additional 0.9% on every dollar above that amount.
The FICA Math, Made Practical
| Tax | Rate | Wages Subject | Employer Annual Cost (on $60K salary) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security | 6.2% | $60,000 | $3,720 |
| Medicare | 1.45% | $60,000 | $870 |
| Total Employer FICA | $4,590 |
That $4,590 is in addition to gross wages — it is a separate cost of employment paid from company funds, not a deduction from the employee’s paycheck. Many business owners calculate the cost of a new hire based on salary alone, then are surprised when actual costs run 7.65% higher before benefits or any other expenses are factored in.
For a $200,000 salary, Social Security caps at $184,500 while Medicare continues on the full $200,000. The employer’s FICA cost on a $200,000 salary is approximately $14,449 (6.2% × $184,500 + 1.45% × $200,000).
FUTA: Federal Unemployment Tax
FUTA is an employer-only tax — nothing is withheld from employees. It funds the federal administration of state unemployment programs and serves as a backstop when state unemployment funds run low.
The Rate and the Wage Base
The statutory FUTA rate is 6.0%, applied to the first $7,000 of each employee’s wages per year. Most employers receive a credit of up to 5.4% against that rate, provided they paid SUTA in full and on time — reducing the effective FUTA rate to 0.6% and capping the cost at $42 per employee per year.
That $42 figure seems trivial. The danger is assuming it always stays there.
FUTA Credit Reduction States
If a state borrows from the federal government to fund its unemployment program and doesn’t repay the loan within the required timeframe, the IRS designates it a credit reduction state. Employers in that state receive a reduced FUTA credit, which raises their effective rate.
California employers, take note: For the 2025 tax year, California carries a FUTA credit reduction of 1.2%, raising the effective rate from 0.6% to 1.8% — meaning $126 per employee instead of $42. For 2026, the credit reduction is projected to increase to approximately 1.5% (effective rate of 2.1%, roughly $147 per employee) if the outstanding federal loan is not repaid by the November deadline. Budget for the higher rate rather than assuming the standard applies.
FUTA Deposit Schedule
FUTA taxes are calculated each payroll run but deposited quarterly. If cumulative FUTA liability for a quarter exceeds $500, deposit it by the last day of the following month:
- Q1 (January–March): Deposit by April 30
- Q2 (April–June): Deposit by July 31
- Q3 (July–September): Deposit by October 31
- Q4 (October–December): Deposit by January 31
If cumulative FUTA liability for a quarter is $500 or less, carry it forward. Any remaining balance of $500 or less at year-end can be paid when you file Form 940 rather than as a separate deposit.
Form 940: The Annual FUTA Return
Form 940 is due January 31 of the following year. If all required deposits were made on time, the filing deadline extends to February 10. All deposits must be made electronically through the IRS’s Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS).
SUTA: State Unemployment Tax
Every state has its own unemployment insurance program funded by SUTA (also called SUI). Like FUTA, it’s an employer-only tax in most states. Three exceptions — Alaska, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania — also require employee contributions.
The key variables that differ by state include:
- Taxable wage base. California uses $7,000 (matching FUTA). Many states go significantly higher — Washington State’s 2026 wage base exceeds $67,600.
- Experience-rated tax rate. Your rate reflects your company’s unemployment claims history. Stable workforces earn lower rates; high turnover accumulates higher ones. New employers typically receive a fixed rate for two to three years.
- Filing and deposit schedule. Most states use a quarterly schedule aligned with Form 941, but some have their own deadlines.
Multi-state employers: If you have employees in five states, you’re tracking five wage bases, five experience-rated rates, and five quarterly filing systems on top of federal obligations. A missed SUTA payment in any one state can reduce your FUTA credit for that state, increasing your federal liability on top of the state penalty.
Federal Income Tax Withholding
Federal income tax withholding is not a tax on the employer — it’s the employee’s money, held in trust until remitted to the IRS. But the employer’s obligations are substantial.
Every new employee must complete a Form W-4, which tells you their filing status, withholding adjustments, and any additional amounts to withhold. You then use the W-4 along with IRS Publication 15-T to calculate the correct withholding for each paycheck.
There’s no employer contribution here — you never match it or fund it from company money. You calculate it, hold it, and remit it. Treating this as a low-stakes task, however, is a serious mistake. See the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty section below.
Deposit Schedules for FICA and Income Tax Withholding
The IRS assigns employers to a deposit schedule based on a lookback period — the 12-month window ending June 30 of the prior year. Based on your total FICA and income tax deposits during that period, you’re classified as either a monthly or semi-weekly depositor.
| Depositor Type | Lookback Period Deposits | When to Deposit |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly | $50,000 or less | By the 15th of the following month |
| Semi-Weekly (Wed–Fri payroll) | Over $50,000 | By the following Wednesday |
| Semi-Weekly (Sat–Tue payroll) | Over $50,000 | By the following Friday |
| $100K Next-Business-Day Rule | Any single day ≥ $100,000 | By the next business day (overrides all schedules) |
The $100,000 next-business-day rule catches many employers off guard during large off-cycle payrolls, year-end bonus runs, or severance payments. It overrides your normal schedule and applies to both monthly and semi-weekly depositors. All federal deposits must be made electronically through EFTPS — paper checks are not acceptable.
Quarterly and Annual Filing Requirements
Form 941: Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return
Most employers must file Form 941 every quarter to report wages paid, federal income tax withheld, and both employee and employer FICA taxes.
| Quarter | Period | Form 941 Due |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | January – March | April 30 |
| Q2 | April – June | July 31 |
| Q3 | July – September | October 31 |
| Q4 | October – December | January 31 |
Small employers with an annual federal employment tax liability of $1,000 or less may qualify to file Form 944 once annually instead of quarterly — but only with prior IRS authorization. You cannot self-select annual filing.
Form 940: Annual FUTA Return
Due January 31 (or February 10 if all FUTA deposits were timely). It reports your total FUTA liability, reconciles deposits, and reflects any credit reduction adjustments.
Forms W-2 and W-3
Forms W-2 must be furnished to employees and filed with the Social Security Administration by January 31, along with the W-3 transmittal summary. There is no automatic extension. Late or incorrect W-2s carry penalties from $60 to $310 per form depending on how late the correction is made.
Forms 1099-NEC
Payments of $600 or more to independent contractors must be reported on Form 1099-NEC by January 31, both to the contractor and to the IRS.
California Employer Payroll Tax Obligations: A Separate Layer
For any employer doing business in California, there’s an additional layer of payroll taxes administered by the California Employment Development Department (EDD). California has four distinct payroll taxes, and understanding which party pays which is essential.
UI — Unemployment Insurance
1.5%–6.2% on first $7,000 per employee. New employers: flat 3.4% for 2–3 years. Max cost: $434/employee/year.
ETT — Employment Training Tax
0.1% on first $7,000 per employee. Maximum $7/employee/year. Filed alongside UI on the quarterly DE 9.
SDI — State Disability Insurance
1.3% (up from 1.2% in 2025) on all wages — no cap since January 2024. Funds disability benefits and Paid Family Leave.
PIT — Personal Income Tax Withholding
Progressive rates from 1%–13%+. Based on each employee’s DE 4 form and EDD withholding schedules.
Critical for California PIT: California does not recognize pre-tax treatment under Section 125 cafeteria plans for state income tax purposes. An employee contributing to a health FSA saves on federal income tax and FICA — but California taxes the full salary before that deduction. Your payroll system must calculate PIT on the correct (higher) California taxable wage amount. This is one of the most frequently misconfigured settings for California employers using national payroll platforms.
California Deposit Schedule and Filing
California uses quarterly filings. The primary return is Form DE 9 (Quarterly Contribution Return), which reports UI, ETT, SDI, and PIT. A companion form, DE 9C, reports individual employee wage and withholding detail.
Beginning January 1, 2026, the California PIT deposit threshold drops to $400 (from $500). Employers who accumulate $400 or more in PIT withholding between payrolls must make a deposit before the next payroll rather than waiting for the quarterly due date. The EDD charges 7% annual interest on delinquent taxes and late UI/ETT payments can trigger penalties of 15% or more.
The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty: The Most Serious Payroll Tax Risk
This is the area of payroll compliance that deserves the most careful attention — because it exposes business owners to personal liability, not just business liability.
When you withhold federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare from employee paychecks, that money is legally held in trust for the U.S. government. It is not your money. Using it for business operations — even as a short-term cash flow measure — is one of the most financially dangerous decisions a business owner can make.
The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP), under IRC Section 6672, allows the IRS to hold any “responsible person” personally liable for 100% of the withheld taxes that were not remitted. Courts and the IRS have defined “responsible person” broadly to include:
- Business owners
- Corporate officers and directors
- Partners in a partnership
- Employees with authority over payroll and financial decisions — including bookkeepers and controllers
- Third-party payroll processors, in some circumstances
The TFRP is assessed per person. If the IRS identifies three responsible parties, each can be held liable for 100% of the unpaid trust fund taxes. The penalties do not cancel each other out. Never use withheld payroll taxes as working capital, and never assume your business structure shields you from personal exposure in this area.
Failure-to-Deposit Penalties
For late or insufficient payroll tax deposits, the IRS applies penalties on a sliding scale based on how late the deposit is:
| Days Late | Penalty Rate |
|---|---|
| 1 to 5 days | 2% of unpaid deposit |
| 6 to 15 days | 5% of unpaid deposit |
| More than 15 days | 10% of unpaid deposit |
| Not deposited within 10 days of IRS notice | 15% of unpaid deposit |
These penalties stack on top of interest charges and apply whether the shortfall is intentional or accidental. The cleanest protection is automation — when deposits are calculated and submitted automatically through an integrated payroll system, the margin for human error is essentially eliminated.
Payroll Tax Obligations for Independent Contractors
If a worker is properly classified as an independent contractor, you are not responsible for withholding FICA, depositing federal income tax withholding, paying FUTA or SUTA, or issuing a W-2. Your obligation is limited to issuing Form 1099-NEC if payments reach $600 or more and maintaining a W-9 on file.
That said, worker misclassification is one of the IRS’s highest enforcement priorities. If a worker classified as an independent contractor actually meets the legal test for an employee — based on behavioral control, financial control, and the type of relationship — you’re liable for back taxes, penalties, and interest as though they had been an employee all along. In some cases, you’re on the hook for both the employer and employee share of FICA.
Classification questions are fact-specific and the stakes of getting them wrong are significant. Our guide to employee vs. independent contractor walks through the key factors the IRS and courts use to make this determination.
Recordkeeping Requirements
Federal law requires employers to retain payroll records for a minimum of four years after the tax is due or paid, whichever is later. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) generally requires records supporting hours and wages to be kept for at least three years.
Records to maintain include:
- Completed W-4 and state withholding forms for every employee (including historical versions when updated)
- Pay stubs or payroll register detail showing gross wages, deductions, and net pay per payroll run
- Dates and amounts of all payroll tax deposits with EFTPS confirmation numbers
- Copies of all quarterly Form 941 and annual Form 940 filings
- Copies of all W-2s and 1099s issued
- I-9 employment eligibility verification forms (three years after hire or one year after termination, whichever is later)
- Time and attendance records for hourly employees
In a compliance audit, these records are what you produce. Missing records are treated as evidence that obligations were not met — not as a neutral fact.
How AccuPay Systems Manages Employer Payroll Tax Obligations
Managing employer payroll tax obligations is not a background administrative task. It’s an ongoing, deadline-driven compliance function with real financial consequences for errors.
AccuPay Systems handles this function from end to end for employers across Southern California and beyond. Using the iSolved HCM platform, we calculate FICA, FUTA, SUTA, and California’s four-tax system on every payroll run. Federal and state deposits are made automatically through EFTPS and the EDD e-Services portal. Form 941 is filed each quarter. Form 940 is filed annually with the correct FUTA credit reduction applied for California employers. W-2s are produced, distributed electronically through the employee self-service portal, and filed with the SSA by January 31.
For multi-state employers, iSolved’s platform tracks separate wage bases, rates, and filing requirements across all states where you have employees — no spreadsheet of SUTA rates across five state portals required.
Our work is backed by our 90-Day Double Money-Back Guarantee and more than 45 years of institutional payroll history. Our very first payroll client came aboard in 2006 and remains with us today — because consistent, accurate, deadline-driven payroll compliance is exactly why clients stay.
For more, see our guide to full-service payroll vs. in-house payroll and our overview of the payroll management services AccuPay provides.
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